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View serial thriller's Profile serial thriller Flag The Promised Land 12 Apr 18 9.04am Send a Private Message to serial thriller Add serial thriller as a friend

As ever, the big security matters in the Middle East serve up huge contradictions, designed, in my opinion, to confuse and pacify us, allowing a safe route for the military industrial complex to plow on, rather than to actually passionately position us behind intervention.

We are shown images of war crimes in Syria, which are presented as a tragedy and worthy of our intervention. Yet we know that the same war crimes are being committed in Yemen, which the UN calls the biggest humanitarian disaster in a generation, and that similar proxies are at play there, but the same outpouring of grief in the media is lacking. Why?

We know that, while Russia's support for Assad in Syria may be significant, it is arguably of less geopolitical significance than the role of Turkey in northern Syria, who are committing a form of ethnic cleansing on the Kurdish population who were crucial in deposing IS. What would our objective be with them? Unsurprisingly, there is only silence from the foreign office.

Not only do we know that intelligence was fabricated in the build up to Iraq and Afghanistan, we also know that Panorama fabricated the story of chemical weapons used by Assad in 2013, when in fact it was napalm. Why? Answers on the back of a postcard.

Russia is a rogue state, one that has a terrible human rights and democratic record. But the idea that what we should be doing is playing up to their war bravado, rather than cleansing our capital of their kleptocrats dodgy money is risible. Strike them where it hurts - in their pocket.

Edited by serial thriller (12 Apr 2018 9.06am)

 


If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 12 Apr 18 9.39am Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by serial thriller

We are shown images of war crimes in Syria, which are presented as a tragedy and worthy of our intervention. Yet we know that the same war crimes are being committed in Yemen, which the UN calls the biggest humanitarian disaster in a generation, and that similar proxies are at play there, but the same outpouring of grief in the media is lacking. Why?

We know that, while Russia's support for Assad in Syria may be significant, it is arguably of less geopolitical significance than the role of Turkey in northern Syria, who are committing a form of ethnic cleansing on the Kurdish population who were crucial in deposing IS. What would our objective be with them? Unsurprisingly, there is only silence from the foreign office.

Edited by serial thriller (12 Apr 2018 9.06am)

Rather obviously Yemen is no threat to Israel. No major wars are contingent on what the House of Saud does there.

How you can say that Syria is of no significant geographical importance boggles belief. Syria borders Israel for crying out loud. If Assad is allowed to get his state back and hence be a puppet of Iran and Russia that represents a problem for Israel and hence America and hence the west in general.

Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 9.41am)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 12 Apr 18 9.43am Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by matthau

Attatched

I've already answered this false contention.

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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pefwin Flag Where you have to have an English ... 12 Apr 18 9.51am

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Yeah, it's got absolutely nothing to do with Syria being anti semitic and having backed anti semitic and anti western terrorist groups.....supporting Iran.

No nothing to do with that.

It's because America wants its oil.....despite being practically self sufficient if it wanted to be and as it is now producing 40 percent of its own oil.

Persian Gulf countries don't even add up to 20 percent of US oil imports with Saudi being the highest at 9 percent.

Funny that...what with all the America is in Iraq for its oil BS I had to listen to.

[Link]

Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 1.56am)

This a very recent change due to widespread fracking and a strategic change post the 2nd Gulf War. Prior to 2009, the US was importing 30 trillion BTUs a year,. currently down to just over 7 trillion.

Mostly due to Obama, i guess.

Edited by pefwin (12 Apr 2018 9.56am)

 


"Everything is air-droppable at least once."

"When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support."

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 12 Apr 18 10.06am Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by pefwin

This a very recent change due to widespread fracking and a strategic change post the 2nd Gulf War. Prior to 2009, the US was importing 30 trillion BTUs a year,. currently down to just over 7 trillion.

Mostly due to Obama, i guess.

Edited by pefwin (12 Apr 2018 9.56am)

Not really, fracking reduced prices for customers....Until Saud started reducing prices to undercut it. America has its own oil supplies....like I said, it takes up to 40 percent from its own lands.

[Link]

America production of oil hasn't slipped under 5,000 barrels a day since 1947.

If America's goal was the oil.....well, they didn't take it. It went to the Iraqis.

America doesn't need middle eastern oil and never has needed middle eastern oil. It takes no more than 17 percent from that region...mostly from the Saudis and if need be could just order more from the Nigerians.

Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 10.12am)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View serial thriller's Profile serial thriller Flag The Promised Land 12 Apr 18 2.56pm Send a Private Message to serial thriller Add serial thriller as a friend

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Rather obviously Yemen is no threat to Israel. No major wars are contingent on what the House of Saud does there.

How you can say that Syria is of no significant geographical importance boggles belief. Syria borders Israel for crying out loud. If Assad is allowed to get his state back and hence be a puppet of Iran and Russia that represents a problem for Israel and hence America and hence the west in general.

Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 9.41am)

Stirling. Calm down mate, and re-read what I've said...

We know that, while Russia's support for Assad in Syria may be significant, it is arguably of less geopolitical significance than the role of Turkey in northern Syria

I'm not saying Syria isn't of geopolitical importance. But there are at least 3 wars waging in that country at the minute and we need to know what we're doing before we dive in.

Have we learnt the lessons from Iraq?

Well I would argue the 3 main questions around that are...

What is our mid to long term oobjective?

What are international impartial bodies on the ground saying, and do they contradict the narrative from our government and media?

What local groups or militias are we going to aid, what is the cost of supporting them and what are their motives?

Unless we can answer these things, any intervention will be disastrous. I'm not going in to your last point as I find such enthusiasm for Israel very puzzling given their government and human rights record.


 


If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4

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croydon proud Flag Any european country i fancy! 12 Apr 18 3.08pm

Originally posted by serial thriller

As ever, the big security matters in the Middle East serve up huge contradictions, designed, in my opinion, to confuse and pacify us, allowing a safe route for the military industrial complex to plow on, rather than to actually passionately position us behind intervention.

We are shown images of war crimes in Syria, which are presented as a tragedy and worthy of our intervention. Yet we know that the same war crimes are being committed in Yemen, which the UN calls the biggest humanitarian disaster in a generation, and that similar proxies are at play there, but the same outpouring of grief in the media is lacking. Why?

We know that, while Russia's support for Assad in Syria may be significant, it is arguably of less geopolitical significance than the role of Turkey in northern Syria, who are committing a form of ethnic cleansing on the Kurdish population who were crucial in deposing IS. What would our objective be with them? Unsurprisingly, there is only silence from the foreign office.

Not only do we know that intelligence was fabricated in the build up to Iraq and Afghanistan, we also know that Panorama fabricated the story of chemical weapons used by Assad in 2013, when in fact it was napalm. Why? Answers on the back of a postcard.

Russia is a rogue state, one that has a terrible human rights and democratic record. But the idea that what we should be doing is playing up to their war bravado, rather than cleansing our capital of their kleptocrats dodgy money is risible. Strike them where it hurts - in their pocket.

Edited by serial thriller (12 Apr 2018 9.06am)


yeah, it was the kurds who got stuck in to islamic state with the russian air power, until then nobody was dealing with it, to easy to forget that now they served their purpose!

 

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 12 Apr 18 8.08pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by serial thriller

Stirling. Calm down mate, and re-read what I've said...

We know that, while Russia's support for Assad in Syria may be significant, it is arguably of less geopolitical significance than the role of Turkey in northern Syria

I'm not saying Syria isn't of geopolitical importance. But there are at least 3 wars waging in that country at the minute and we need to know what we're doing before we dive in.

Have we learnt the lessons from Iraq?

Well I would argue the 3 main questions around that are...

What is our mid to long term oobjective?

What are international impartial bodies on the ground saying, and do they contradict the narrative from our government and media?

What local groups or militias are we going to aid, what is the cost of supporting them and what are their motives?

Unless we can answer these things, any intervention will be disastrous. I'm not going in to your last point as I find such enthusiasm for Israel very puzzling given their government and human rights record.


You have questions.....that's understandable.

The outcomes are the responsibility of the leaders that take the decisions. We will support them or not depending upon our perceptions of the alternatives. From my perspective that will mostly fall down into traditional modernist/postmodernist/establishment/anti establishment lines.

However, all this 'what are our mid to long term goals' nonsense.....Do you seriously think that none of this was done in previous wars? Of course it was. The reality is that plans are plans and reality on the ground is another thing. Like Mike Tyson said, 'everyone has a plan, until they are punched in the mouth'. The goal was to turn Iraq into a functioning democracy. It was achieved, but at great cost.....not a cost that ultimately was worth the effort for the west nor a democracy that the west sees in its image or can rely upon.

However there is a big difference between deployment on Vietham/Iraq like levels and non intervention. The non intervention in Syria ultimately worsened the situation. A choice which plenty on the left supported and also some on the right and it's has had negative consequences.....Russia and Iran stepped into the space we afforded them. Assad has been practically assured his position...A victory from the jaws of defeat.

If you call non intervention 'learning a lesson' from Iraq I suggest that it was a badly taught one. The only painfully useful lesson that I can see is in the reluctance to use large numbers of ground troops and stick to air campaigns in culturally different countries. However, this could have been learnt from Vietham.

As for your reluctance to talk about the Jewish question. As you are on the far left I can understand why. However, when discussing the middle east and western actions I don't think the matters can be divorced.

To answer your question on why the west supports Israel. Well, Israel is basically made up of European immigrants who predictably implement the only real democracy in the region. They are under constant threat on all sides.

As to the rights and wrongs of how Israel came to be...well we probably would agree on that. Also we might agree upon the wisdom of how it treats its enemies....However, recently my thoughts are quite conflicted on that. I can see few positives and plenty of possible negatives.


Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 8.21pm)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 12 Apr 18 8.17pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by croydon proud


yeah, it was the kurds who got stuck in to islamic state with the russian air power, until then nobody was dealing with it, to easy to forget that now they served their purpose!

It was the western and certain middle eastern nations who supported the Kurds with air power. The Kurds were the only effective fighting force against IS but they would not have survived without that air support.

The Russians only came in after it was obvious that the west wouldn't move beyond protecting the Kurds.

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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pefwin Flag Where you have to have an English ... 12 Apr 18 9.26pm

Originally posted by Stirlingsays


To answer your question on why the west supports Israel. Well, Israel is basically made up of European immigrants who predictably implement the only real democracy in the region. They are under constant threat on all sides.


Edited by Stirlingsays (12 Apr 2018 8.21pm)

Under 30% isn't it, who predictably implement their own agenda; compared with over 20% Palestians.

As another point of information that State is actively supported by the USA not "the West".

 


"Everything is air-droppable at least once."

"When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support."

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View Harry Beever's Profile Harry Beever Flag Newbury 12 Apr 18 9.31pm Send a Private Message to Harry Beever Add Harry Beever as a friend

If Trump changes his mind do we go it alone? Doubt it.

 

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View serial thriller's Profile serial thriller Flag The Promised Land 12 Apr 18 10.16pm Send a Private Message to serial thriller Add serial thriller as a friend

It's worth remembering what form 'democracy' took in Iraq. When Iraqis - and many well meaning western troops - attempted to stage elections and organise neutral bodies to oversee them, the outcomes were declared void by western forces, who instead implemented a puppet government that oversaw the transferral of state assets in to private hands.

Obviously some of the biggest victors from that transferral - Halliburton and KBR for instance - had direct links with the British and American governments who had so hawkishly and clumsily warmongered in the first place. Stirling is right to say that oil wasn't a big motives, but it didn't need to be when 138 Bill worth of state assets were up for grabs...https://edition-m.cnn.com/2013/03/19/business/iraq-war-contractors/index.html

I am not a non-interventionist. I believe passionately in good diplomacy which comes about through transparency and accountability. Military action should be a last resort, and done with a thorough plan. But what I see in the Syria debate now is no plan, no transparency, little understanding of the multiple groups and conflicts at play, and all it will end up with is more tragic and unnecessary bodies coming back home to angry families.

 


If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4

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